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GIFT  OF 


Bulletin  of  Bibliography  Pamphlets,  No.  25 

Literary  Geography 

A  BIBLIOGRAPHY 

BY 

Edith  ].  Roswell  Hawley 


Bibliography  presented  for  graduation  Library 
School  of  the  New  York  Public  Library,  1915, 
with  additional  entries  to  March,  1917. 


BOSTON 

THE  BOSTON  BOOK  COMPANY 
J9J7 


To  be  issued  in 

The  Bulletin  of  Bibliography 

J9J8 


Tin-  Riverdale  Press,  Brookline,  Mass. 


Bibliography  of  Literary  Geography 

BY  EDITH  J.  ROSWELL  HAWLEY 

Bibliography  presented  for  graduation,  Library  School  of 
the  New  York  Public  Library,  1915,  with  additional 
entries  to  March,  1917. 


"Wer  den  Dichter  will  verstehen 
Muss  in  Dichters  Lande  gehen." 

Goethe. 

Books  and  articles  listed  are  in  The  New  York  Public 
Library,  except  a  few  titles  which  are  copied  from  the 
Library  of  Congress  depository  catalogue.  This  biblio- 
graphy includes  only  the  best  known  English  and  Ameri- 
can authors.  At  some  future  time  another  bibliography 
may  be  compiled  including  the  less  known  modern 
authors. . 

ENGLISH 

General 

Adcock,  Arthur  St.  John.     The  booklovers'  London. 

X.  V.  Macmillan,  1913.     324  p.     illus. 
Famous   houses   and    literary  shrines   of   London. 

Lond.    Dent.,    N.    Y.    Button,   1912.     356    p.     illus. 

ports. 
Ballingall,  William.     Scenes  of  Scottish  story.    Edin. 

Edmonston,  1874.     88  p.     illus. 
Bartholomew,  John  George.     A  gazetteer  of  towns 

and  places  in  Europe  having  a  literary  or  historical 

interest. 

In  his  literary  and  historical  atlas  of  Europe.  Lond.- 

Dent.,   N.  Y.  button    [1910].     p.   145-82.       (Every 

man's  Library. 
The   Lake    District   associated  with   Wordsworth, 

Coleridge,  Southey,    De  Quincey,  Ruskin,  etc.    map. 
In  his  Literary  and  historical  atlas  of  Europe.  Lond. 

Dent.,  N.  Y.  Button  [1912].    p.  133. 
Bates,  Katherine    Lee.     The    Lake    country,     illus. 

Chautauquan  45:  36-65.     Dec.,  1905. 

3 


3G6342 


Boynton,  Percy  Holmes.  London  in  English  litera- 
ture. Chic.  Univ.  of  Chic.  Press,  1913.  326  p.  illus. 
Bibliography,  "Illustrative  reading,"  at  end  of  each 

chapter. 
Appendix:    Illustrative  novels;    p.  301-30. 

Contents.  Chaucer's  London.  —  Shakespeare's  London.  — 
Milton's  London.  —  Dryden's  London.  — Addison's  London. — 
Johnson's  London.  —  London  of  Lamb  and  Byron.  —  Dickens' 
London.  —  Victorian  London.  —  Contemporary  London. 

Brereton,  Austin.     The  literary  history  of  the  Adelphi 
and  its  neighborhood.     2d  ed.     Lond.  Unwin,   1908. 
294  p.     illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 

Brown,  Alice.  By  oak  and  thorn;  a  record  of  English 
days.  Bost.  Houghton,  1896.  226  p. 

Contents.  In  praise  of  gypsying.  —  The  food  of  fancy.  — 
A  still  hunt.  —  The  pilgrim  in  Devon.  —  The  haunt  of  the 
Doones.  —  The  land  of  Arthur.  —  The  Bronte  country.  — 
The  quest  of  the  cup.  —  An  unresisted  temptation.  —  Latter 
day  Cranford.  —  Under  the  great  blue  tent. 

Bullock,  John  Malcolm.  London  and  literature. 
Lamp  28:  107-10.  Mar.,  1914. 

Gives  a  list  of  memorial  tablets  erected  in  London  to  literary 
men  and  women. 

Chancellor,  Edwin  Beresford.     The  annals  of  Fleet 
Street;  its  traditions  and  associations.     Lond.     Chap- 
man, 1912.     343  p.     illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 

The  history  of  the  squares  of  London,  topo- 
graphical and  historical.  Lond.  Paul,  1907.  420  p. 

illus. 

See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 
Colvin,    Sidney.     Box  Hill  and  its  memories,     illus. 

Scribner's  Magazine  60:  195-209.     Aug.,  1916. 
Conway,   Mpncure  Daniel.     The  English  lakes  and 

their    Genii,     illus.     Harper's    Magazine    62:    7-27. 

Dec.,  1880. 
Cradle  of  the  Lake  Poets.      Illus.  Leisure  Hour  37: 

.").s;3-90, 663-8.     1888. 
Dobson,  Austin.     A  literary  ramble  along  the  Thames 

from  Fulham  to  Chiswick.     illus.     Century  32   (n.s. 

10):  175-86.     June,  1886. 
Dutt,  William  Alfred.     Some  literary  associations  of 

East  Anglia.     N.  Y.  McClure,  1907.     324  p.     illus. 
Faust,  A.  J.     Literary  pilgrimage  in  London.     Catholic 

World  36:  699-712.     Feb.,  lss:i. 
Forman,    Henry  James.     The  city:      some   Milton, 

Shakespeare  and  Dickens  land.     In  his  London,  an 

intimate  picture.     N.  Y.  MacBride,  1913.    p.  95-116. 
Geddie,    John.     Romantic    Edinburgh.     2d    ed.    rev. 

Lond.    Sands,  1911.      L'99  p.  illus. 
Contains  references  to  various  authors. 


Grant,  Arthur.  In  the  old  paths;  im-mories  of  literary 
pilurimu.urs.  Bost.  Houghtnn,  1«.»M.  275  p.  illus. 
Contents.  In  the  old  paths.  —  Among  tin-  beeches  of 
Buckinghamshire.  —  In  Shakespeare's  Arden.  —  Memories 
of  Litchfield.  —  Oxford  and  the  Cotswolds.  —  Amid  the 
haunts  of  Cowper.  —  "The  e'en  brings  a'  name." 

Hadden,  James  Cuthbert.  Some  literary  associa- 
tions of  Lakeland.  Argosy  70:  379-87.  Apr.,  1900. 

Hare,  Augustus  John  Cuthbert.     Walks  in  London. 
7th  ed.  rev.      N.  Y.  Macmillan,  Lond.    Allen,  1902. 
2  v. 
Contains  references  to  various  authors. 

Hargrove,  Ethel  C.  Literary  associations.  In  her 
Wanderings  in  the  Isle  of  Wight.  Lond.  Melrose, 
1913.  p.  134-58. 

Harwood,  William  Sumner.  Literary  Chelsea,  illus. 
Critic  38:  417-24.  May,  1901. 

Haskell,  Mabel  Percy.  Paradise  of  poets.  (Lake 
country)  illus.  Delineator  66:  412-14.  Sept.,  1905. 

Headlam,   Cecil.     The  Inns  of  Court.     Lond.   Black, 
1909.     211  p.    illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 

Hemstreet,  Charles  and  Hemstreet,  Marie.  Nooks 
and  corners  of  old  London;  by  Charles  and  Marie 
Hemstreet.  N.  Y.  Potts  (cl910J.  186  p.  illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 
Contents.  Within  sound  of  Bow  Bells.  —  On  the  way  to 
Grr at  St.  Helens.  —  Milton's  birthplace.  —  Lamb's  workshop 
and  some  other  things.  —  By  way  of  the  Tower  and  London 
Bridge.  —  The  spell  of  the  Temple  and  Inns  of  Court.  — 
Along  the  Strand  and  a  peep  at  Covent  Garden  and  the  coffee 
houses.  —  A  passing  glimpse  of  many  windows.  —  From 
Regent  Street  to  the  shadows  of  Soho. 

Home,      Gordon     Cochrane.     The     English     lakes. 
Lond.  Black,  1911.     63  p.    illus.     (Beautiful  Britain.) 
Contains  references  to  the  Lake  poets. 

Howitt,  William.  Homes  and  haunts  of  the  most 
eminent  British  poets.  3d  ed.  Lond.  Routledge, 
1857.  706  p.  illus. 

Hutton,  Laurence.  Literary  landmarks  of  Edin- 
burgh. N.  Y.  Harper,  1898.  80  p.  illus. 

Literary  landmarks  of  London.     8th  ed.     N.   Y. 

Harper,  1892.     367  p.     ports. 

Literary  landmarks   of   Oxford.     Lond.  Richards, 

1903.     274  p.     illus. 

Jessopp,  Augustus.  The  lake-dwellers.  19th  Cen- 
tury 48:  743-54.  Nov.,  1900. 

Lang,  Andrew,  ed.  Poets'  country.  Phil.  Lippincott, 
1907.  363  p.  illus. 

Contents.  Shakespeare.— William  Wordsworth. — Byron. — 
S.  T.  Coleridge.  —  Scott. — Shelley  and  nature.  —  Mil- 
ton.—  Sir  John  Denham  and  "Cooper's  Hill." — Waller, 
Cowley.  and  Dryden.  —  The  descriptive  poetry  of  the  eigh- 
teenth century.  —  Pope  and  the  minor  poets  of  the  Augustan 
age. — Akenside,  Armstrong,  Shenstone,  Grainger,  Mallet, 
and  Smollett.  —  Goldsmith,  Collins  and  Gray.  —  Falconer 


and  marine  scenery,  Mason,  the  Whartons,  and  Beattie.  — 
Langhorne,  Jago,  Scott  of  Amwell,  Charlotte  Smith,  Bowles, 
Crowe,  and  Hurdis.  —  William  Cowper.  —  Crabbe  and  Aid- 
borough. —  Tennyson. —  Chaucer  at  Eltham.  —  Oliver  Gold- 
smith at  Hyde  House  Farm.  —  Keats  at  Enfield.  —  Edmund 
Spenser  at  Penhurst.  —  Thomas  Moore  in  Wicklow. —  Burns. 

Lang,  Elsie  M.  Literary  London;  with  an  introduc- 
tion by  G.  K.  Chesterton.  Lond.  Laurie,  [1906]. 
349  p.  illus. 

An  alphabetical  list  of  streets,  houses  and  distiicts  connected 
with  literature. 

Literary    shrines    of    old    London.     In  Ditchfield, 

P.  H.,  ed.  Memorials  of  old  London.  Lond.  Bern- 
rose,  1908.  v.  2,  p.  166-81. 

Lansdale,     Maria    Hornor.     Scotland     historic    and 
romantic.     Phil.  Coates,  1902.     2v.     illus. 
Contains  references  to  several  authors. 

Lee,  Sidney.  The  Johnson  Club;  a  literary  pilgrimage 
to  Rochester,  illus.  Pall  Mall  Magazine  36:  513- 
21.  Oct.,  1905.  Chaucer  and  Shakespeare.  Pepys 
and  Hogarth.  Dr.  Johnson.  Charles  Dickens. 

Lindley,  Percy.  Holidays  in  England  by  the  cathedral 
cities,  the  Tennyson  and  Dickens  country  and  the 
homes  of  the  Pilgrim  fathers.  N.  Y.  Great  Eastern 
Railway  of  England  [1S85?].  97  p.  illus.  map. 

Literary  Landmarks  of  London. 

Living  Age,  227  (7th  ser.  9):  775-8.  Dec.  22, 
1900. 

—  Same. 

Eclectic  magazine.  136  (3d  ser.  5):  264-7,  Feb. 
1901. 

Loftie,  William  John.  English  lake  scenery;  with 
archaeological,  historical,  poetical,  and  descriptive 
notes.  N.  Y.,  Scribner,  1875.  114  p.  illus. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  Backgrounds  of  literature- 
N.  Y.  Macmillan,  1912.  328  p.  illus. 

Contents.  The  Lake  Country  and  Wordsworth.  —  Emer- 
son and  Concord.  —  The  Washington  Irving  country.  — 
\\Vimar  and  Goethe.  —  1  he  land  of  Lorna  Doone.  —  America 
in  Whitman's  poetry.  —  The  land  of  Scott.  —  Hawthorne  and 
the  new  world. 

Maurice,  Arthur  Bartlett.  The  literary  Baedeker, 
illus.  Bookman  (N.  Y.)  37:  411-25,  546-64,  628-44, 
June- AUK- .  HH-'*. 

1.    London  and  rural  England.  —  2.    Paris  and  rural  France. 

—  3.    About  the  continent. 

Nicoll,  William  Robertson.  The  literary  associations 
oi  Il;uiip<tfu«l.  illus.  Bookman  (London)  5:  11  !•'>, 
it.  7;0:  I  I.',  (17:  11  15,144.  Oct.,  1893-Feb.,  1895. 

Northup,  Clark  Sutherland.  Literary  associations 
ot  London.  I  >ial  .->«>:  -JJKMi.  Apr.  1,  1914, 

Noyes,  Alfred.  The  Thainr-  in  literature,  illus. 
Bookman  (London) 82:  r_':*-7.  July,  r.»n:. 

6 


Olcott,  Charles  Sumner.  Tin-  hm>  of  the  camera. 
Host.  HoutUiton,  191-1.  300  p.  illus.  ports. 

Contents.  The  lure  of  the  camera.  —  Literary  r.unblcs 
in  Gt.  Britain.  —  A  day  in  Wordsworth's  country.  —  From 
Hawthornden  to  Roslin  Gl_»n. —  Tlu-  country  of  Mrs.  Hum- 
phry Ward.  —  A  tour  of  tin-  Italian  Lakes.  —  Literary 
landmarks  of  New  England.  —  A  day  with  John  Burroughs.  — 
Glimpses  of  the  Yellowstone.  —  The  Grand  Carton  of  Arizona. 

Rawnsley,  Hardwicke  Drummond.  Literary  associa- 
tions of  the  English  lakes.  Glasgow,  MacLehose, 
ls«M.  2v. 

Contents,  v.  1.  Cumberland,  Keswick,  and  Southey's 
country,  v.  2.  Westmoreland,  Windermere,  and  the  haunts 
of  Wordsworth. 

Rideing,  William  Henry.  In  the  land  of  Lorna  Doone, 
and  other  pleasurable  excursions  in  England.  N.  Y. 
Crowell.  [c!895].  173  p. 

Contents.  In  the  land  of  Lorna  Doone.  —  In  Cornwall 
with  an  umbrella.  —  Coaching  trips  out  of  London.  —  A  bit 
of  Yorkshire  coast. — •  Amy  Robsart,  Kenilworth.and  War- 
wick. 

Roscoe,  Edward  Stanley.  Penn's  country;  being 
literary  and  historical  studies  of  the  country  of  Penn, 
Milton,  Gray,  Burke,  and  the  Disraelis,  rev.  and 
enl.  ed.  Lond.  and  N.  Y.  Longmans,  1914.  212  p. 
illus.  map,  ports. 

Sharp,  William  (Fiona  MacLeod,  pseud.).  Literary 
geography.  N.  Y.  Scribner,  1904.  248  'p.  illus. 
ports. 

Contents.  The  country  of  George  Meredith.  —  1  he  coun- 
try of  Stevenson.  —  Dickens-land.  —  Scott-land.  —  The  coun- 
try of  George  Eliot.  —  Thackeray-land.  —  The  Bronte  coun- 
try.—  Ayhvin-land  (Wales  and  East  Anglia).  —  The  Car- 
lyle  country.  —  The  literary  geography  of  the  English  lakes.  — 
The  literary  geography  of  the  Thames.  —  The  literary  geog- 
raphy of  the  lake  of  Geneva. 

Shelley,  Henry  Charles.  Inns  and  taverns  of  old 
London,  setting  forth  the  historical  and  literary  associa- 
tions of  those  ancient  hostelries  together  with  an 
account  of  the  most  notable  coffee  houses,  clubs,  and 
pleasure  gardens  of  the  British  metropolis.  Bost. 
Page,  1909.  366  p.  illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 

Literary  by-paths  in  Old  England.     Bost.  Little, 

1900.     400  p.     illus. 

Contents.  In  Spenser's  footsteps.  —  The  home  of  Sir 
Philip  Sidney.  —  Memorials  of  William  Penn.  —  The  birth- 
place of  Gray's  Elegy.  —  Gilbert  White's  Selborne.  —  Gold- 
smith's "Deserted  Village."  —  Burns  in  Ayrshire.  —  Keats 
and  his  circle.  —  In  Carlyle's  country.  —  Thomas  Hood's 
homes  and  friends.  —  Royal  Winchester. 

Sydney,  William  Connor.  Cradle  of  the  Lake  poets. 
Living  Age  v.  200  (6th  ser.  v.  1):  154-64.  Jan.  20, 
1894. 


Tearle,  Christian   (pseud,  of    E.  T.  Jaques).      The 

pilgrim  from  Chicago;  being  furthur  rambles  with 
an  American.  Lond.  Longmans,  1913.  349  p.  illus. 
Contents.  With  Dickens  in  Jacob's  Island.  —  Poore 
Pancras.  —  On  the  way  to  Reculver.  —  Reculver  and  the 
"Little  Wonder."  —  Fordwich  and  some  gossip  about  Chau- 
cer. —  The  little  friars  in  Canterbury.  —  The  Black  Prince's 
well  and  an  anthem.  —  Horwood's  map  of  London.  —  Fagin's 
country  and  Colebrook  Row.  —  A  nibble  at  the  Temple.  — 
Another  nibble  at  the  Temple.  —  Towards  St.  Albans.  —  "Sic 
Sedebat."  —  Pepys'  church.  —  Holy  Trinity,  Minories,  and 
Tower  Hill.  —  Johnson's  house  in  Gough  Square. 

• Rambles  with  an  American.     N.  Y.  Duffield,  1910. 

376  p.     illus. 
Contains  references  to  various  English  authors. 

Vaughan,  John.  Literary  associations  of  Hampshire. 
19th  Century  61:  658-69.  Apr.,  1907. 

Winchester    Cathedral    close;      its   historical   and 

literary  associations.     Lond.  and  N.  Y.  Pitman,  1914. 
281  p.     illus.  plan. 

Wharton,  Anne  Rollings  worth.  Where  poets  lived 
and  loved.  (English  lakes.)  Lippincott  75:  577-83. 
May,  1905. 

Whitten,  Wilfred  (John  O 'London,  pseud).  London 
in  poetry  and  poets  in  London.  Bookman  (London) 
31:  117-25.  Dec.,  1906. 

A  Londoner's  London.      2d  ed.     Lond.  Methuen 

[1913].     329  p.     illus. 
See  index  for  references  to  individual  authors. 

Wolfe,    Theodore    Frelinghuysen.     A    literary    pil- 
grimage among  the  haunts  of  famous  British  authors. 
5th     ed.     Phil.      Lippincott,      1895.     260      p.     illus. 
Chapter  headings  do  not  indicate  the  scope  of   the 
chapter. 

Contents.  Literary  Hampstead  and  Highgate.  —  By 
Southwark  and  Thames-side  to  Chelsea.  —  The  scene  of 
Gray's  Elegy.  —  Dickensland,  Gads  Hill  and  abouts.  —  Some 
haunts  of  Byron.  —  The  home  of  Childe  Harold. —  War- 
wickshire; the  Loamshire  of  George  Eliot.  —  Yorkshire 
shrines:  Dotheboy's  Hall  and  Rokeby. —  Sterne's  sweet 
retirement.  —  Haworth  and  the  Brontes.  —  Early  haunts  of 
Robert  Collyer:  Eugene  Aram.  —  Home  of  Sidney  Smith.  — 
Nithsdale  rambles.  —  A  niece  of  Rorbet  Burns.  —  Highland 
Mary,  her  homes  and  grave.  —  Bronte"  scenes  in  Brussels.  — 
Leman'fl  shrines.  —  Chateaux  of  Ferney  and  Coppet. 

Literary  rambles  at  home  and  abroad.     Phil,  and 

Lond.     Lippincott,  1901.     235  p.     illus.     England,  p. 
119-218. 

Austen 

Adams,  Oscar  Fay.  In  the  footsteps  of  Jane  Austen. 
illus.  Xew  KnK'Uiml  Magazine  n.s.  8:  594-608.  July, 
1893. 

Benson,  Arthur  Christopher.  Jane  Austen  at  Lyme 
Krgis.  Putnam's  Magazine  6:  206-13.  May.  1909. 

Garnett,  Richard.  Jane  Austen  ami  lu-r  country, 
illus.  Bookman  (N.  Y.)  15:  44-51,  Mar.,  1902. 

8 


Kebbel,  T.  E.  Jane  Austen  at  home.  Living  Age  164 
-."•til  SIT.  41)):  680-85.  Mar.  14,  1S.V.. 

Blackmore 

Brown,  Alice.  The  haunt  of  the  Doones.  In  her 
By  oak  and  thorn.  Boston.  Houghton,  1896.  p.  72- 
100. 

Johnson,  Clifton.  The  land  of  Lorna  Doone.  Harper's 
Bazar  33:  L'OL'-S.  May  26,  1900. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  The  land  of  Lorna  Doone. 
illus.  In  his  Backgrounds  of  Literature.  N.  Y.  Mac- 
millan,  1912.  p.  183-92. 

Maurice,  Arthur  Bartlett.  R.  D.  Blackmore's  coun- 
try, illus.  Bookman  (X.  Y.)  14:  29-37.  Sept.,  1901. 

Rideing,  William  Henry.  In  the  land  of  Lorna 
Doone.  In  his  In  the  land  of  Lorna  Doone  and  other 
pleasurable  excursions  in  England.  N.  Y.  Crowell 
[cl895],  p.  1-22. 

Snell,  Frederick  John.  The  Blackmore  country. 
Lond.  Black,  1906.  288  p.  illus.  map.  (The  pil- 
grimage series.) 

The  Valley  of  the  Doones.  Atlantic  71:  573-5,  Apr., 
1893. 

Bronte 

Brown,  Alice.     The  Bronte  country.     In  her  By  oak 

and  thorn.     Boston.     Houghton,  1896.     p.  132-43. 
Chadwick,    Esther   Alice.     In    the   footsteps   of    the 

Brontes,  by  Mrs.  Ellis  H.  Chadwick.     Lond.    Pitman, 

1914.     502  p.     illus.  ports.     Bibliography,  p.  489-90. 
Craik,     Georgiana     M.        Birthplace     of     Charlotte 

Bronte.     Canadian  Magazine  9:    264-7.     Apr.,  1876. 
Davies,  William  M.     Haworth  thirty-seven  years  ago. 

Temple  Bar  107:  132-7.     Jan.,  1896. 
Evans,   E.   P.     Bronte  family  and   their  home.     Put- 
nam's Magazine   16:  278-86.     Sept.,   1870. 
Hobson,    Ernest.     "Shirley"    land.     Living    Age    251 

(7th  ser.  33):  77-87.     Oct.,  13,  1906. 
Home  of  Charlotte  Bronte.      (Spectator.)      Outlook 

90:  906-8.     Dec.  26,  1908. 
Meeker,    Claude.     Haworth;     home   of   the    Brontes. 

Bradford,     Treweek,     1R95.     44     p.     illus.     (Bronte 

Society  pub.  v.  1,  pt.  ii.) 
Scrutori,    William.     Birthplace   of   Charlotte   Bronte; 

with  two  etchings  by  the  author    (Thornton  Chapel 

and  Parsonage).     Leeds,  Fletcher,  1884,  58  p. 
Sharp,  William  (Fiona  Macleod,  pseud.).  The  Bronte 

country,     illus.     In  his  Literary  geography.     N.   Y. 

Scribner,   1904.     p.   106-24. 
[Sherwood,  John  D.]     Visits  to  the  homes  of  authors: 

Charlotte  Bronte.     Hours    at  Home,  5:   244-5,  July, 

1867. 


Stead,     J.     J.     The     "Shirley"     country.     Bradford, 
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13 


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844-5.  Oct.  27-Dec.  29,  1900. 

Thomas  Hardy's  Wessex.  map.  Bookman  (London) 
1:  26-8.  Oct.,  1S5U. 

White,  James  William.  In  Thomas  Hardy's  country. 
Nation  55:  184-5.  200-202.  Sept.  8,  15,  1892. 

Windle,  Bertram  Coghill  Alan.  The  Wessex  of 
Thomas  Hardy.  Lond.  Lane,  1902.  332  p.  illus. 
maps. 

Kipling 
Forbes,  Edgar  Allen.     Across  India  with  Kim.     illus. 

World's  Work  24:  639-49.     Oct.,  1912. 
Maurice,  Arthur  Bartlett.     Rudyard  Kipling's  United 

States,     illus.     Bookman  (N.  Y.)  38:  156-63.     Oct., 

1913. 
Munson,     Arley.       Kipling's    India.       Garden    City, 

Doubleday,  1915.     204  p.     illus. 

Contents.     The  threshold  of  India.  —  Anglo   India.  —  The 

Himalayas.  —  The    great   desert.  —  The     border    country. — 

The  oldest  land.  —  On  the  road  to  Mandalay. 
Same.     Bookman  39:  30-45, 153-71,  255-71,  Mar.- 

May,  1914. 
Wolfe",    Theodore    Frelinghuysen.     Kipling.     In   his 

Literary     haunts     and     homes.     American     authors. 

Phil.  Lippincott,  1899.     p.  207-14. 
Young,  William  Arthur.     A  dictionary  of  the  charac- 
ters and  scenes  in  the  stories  and  poems  of  Rudyard 

Kipling,  1886-1911.     Lond.  Routledge  [1911]. 

231   p.     Bibliography,   including  "Addenda"   and   "a 

summary  of  the  books,"  p.  v-xxx. 

17 


The  Sussex  of  Rudyard  Kipling,     illus.     Bookman 

(X.  Y.)  43:  38-51.     Mar.,  1916. 

Lamb 

Ainger,  Alfred.     How  I  traced  Charles  Lamb  in  Hert- 
fordshire.    Living    Age    241    (7th    ser.    23):    655-67. 

June,  11,  1904. 
Boynton,    Percy    Holmes.     London    of    Byron    and 

Lamb,     illus.     port.     Chautauquan  62:  33-55.    Mar., 

1911. 
Fitzgerald,     Percy    Hetherington.     Charles    Lamb; 

his  friends,  his  haunts,  and  his  books.     2d  ed.     Lond. 

Bentley,   1866.     229  p.     port. 
Grave   of    Charles   Lamb.      Living   Age  75   (3d  ser. 

19):  316-18.     Nov.    15,    1862. 
Leach,  Anna.     Where  Charles  Lamb  still  lives,     illus. 

Munsey  17:  569-76.     July,  1897. 
Martin,  Benjamin  Ellis.     In  the  footprints  of  Charles 

Lamb.     N.   Y.   Scribner,    1890.     193   p.     illus.    port. 

Bibliography:  p.  150-93. 
Same.     Scribner's  Mag.  7:  267-82,  471-86.     Mar., 

Apr.,  1890. 
Urbanus    Sylvan,    pseud.     House    in    Hertfordshire. 

Living  Age  239  (7th  ser.  21) :  656-61.     Dec.  12,  1903. 

Meredith 
Gary,  Elizabeth  Luther.     Landscape  background  in 

George  Meredith's  writings.     Critic  47:  52-7.     July, 

1905. 
Lusk,  Lewis.     George  Meredith's  country,     illus.    Art 

Journal  72:  35-40,  65-70.     Feb.-Mar.,  1910. 
Sharp,    William     (Fiona    Macleod,    pseud.}.      The 

'country  of  George  Meredith,     illus.     In  his  Literary 

geography.     N.  Y.  Scribner,   1904.     p.  1-9. 

Scott 

Amy  Robsart  and  Cumnor  Hall.  London  Society  10: 
:;is  53.  Oct.,  1866. 

Bartholomew,  John  George.  "Ivanhoe";  map  show- 
in «  routes  of  Cedric,  Isaac,  and  Brian  de  Bois-Guilbert. 
In  his  Literary  and  historical  atlas  of  Europe.  Lond. 
Dent,  N.  Y.  Dutton  [1912].  p.  129. 

Land  of  Scott,  map.  In  his  Literary  and  histori- 
cal atlas  of  Europe.  Lond.  Dent,  N.  Y.  Dutton 
[1912].  p.  129. 

Crockett,  William  Shillinglaw.  Footsteps  of  Scott. 
I.. Mid.  Foulis,  190S.  21S  p.  illus. 

The  Scott  country.    2d    ed.     Lond.    Black,  1902. 

510    p.     illus.     (The   pilgrimage   series.) 

Sir  Walter  Scott;  some  of  his  homes  and  haunts. 

illus.     Bookman  (London)  21:    190-99.     Mar.,   1902. 

Hannay,  David.  Sir  Walter  Scott's  country,  illus. 
Art  Journal  39:  1-4,  49-52,  lO'.t  r_>,  m  ii.  Jan.- 
July.  1887. 

18 


Howitt,  William.  Sir  Walter  Scott,  illus.  In  his 
Homes  and  haunts  of  the  most  eminent  British  poets. 
3d  ed.  Lond.  Routledge,  1857.  p.  446-86. 

Hunnewell,  James  Frothingham.  The  lands  of 
Scott.  Bost.  Houghton,  1899.  508  p.  illus.  maps. 

Lang,  Andrew.  Scott,  illus.  In  his  Poets'  country. 
Phil.  Lippincott,  1907.  p.  83-99. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  The  land  of  Scott,  illus. 
In  his  Backgrounds  of  literature.  N.  Y.  Macmillan, 
1912.  p.  249-302. 

[Martin,  John,  ed.]  Illustrations;  landscape,  historical, 
and  antiquarian,  to  the  poetical  works  of  Sir  Walter 
Scott.  Lond.  Tilt  [pref.  1834],  731.  illus. 

Landscape  illustrations  of  the  Waverley  novels, 

with  descriptions  of  the  views.  Lond.  Tilt,  1834. 
2  v.  v.  1:  Waverley  to  Legend  of  Montrose.  v.  '2: 
Ivanhoe  to  Woodstock. 

Napier,  George  G.  The  homes  and  haunts  oi  Sir 
Walter  Scott.  Glasgow,  MacLehose,  1897.  216  p. 
illus.  map. 

Norton  and  Shaw.  Shaw's  tourists'  picturesque  guide 
to  Abbotsford,  Melrose,  and  the  land  of  Scott.  Lond. 
n.d.  74  p.  illus.  map. 

Olcott,  Charles  Sumner.  The  country  of  Sir  Walter 
Scott.  Bost.  Houghton,  1913.  414  p.  illus.  map. 
Map  of  Scotland  indicating  localities  connected  with 
each  novel,  p.  30. 

Ritchie,  Leitch.  Scott  and  Scotland.  Lond.  Long- 
mans, 1835.  255  p.  illus.  (Heath's  picturesque 
annual  for  1835.) 

The  scenery  of  The  bride  of  Lammermoor.  Cham- 
bers' Journal  66  (5th  ser.  6):  321-4.  May  25,  1889. 

Sharp,  William  (Fiona  Macleod,  pseud.).  Scott- 
land,  illus.  In  his  Literary  geography.  N.  Y. 
Scribner,  1904.  p.  56-73. 

Sir  Walter  Scott's  country,  illus.  Bookman  (N. 
Y.)  16:  210-14.  Nov.,  1902.  Review  of  W.  S.  Crokc- 
ett's  book:  The  Scott  country. 

Tearle,  Christian  (pseud,  of  E.  T.  Jaques),  Abbots- 
ford  house.  In  his  Rambles  with  an  American. 
N.  Y.  Duffield,  1910.  p.  251-63. 

Wright,  George  Newham.  Landscape-historical  illus- 
trations of  Scotland  and  the  Waverly  novels:  from 
drawings  by  Turner,  Bentley.and  Cruikshank.  Lond. 
Fisher.  [183?]  2  v. 

Stevenson 
Carrington,   James    Beebee.     Along    the    route    of 

Stevenson's  Inland  voyage,     illus.     Book   Buyer  25: 

229-32.     Oct.,  1902. 
Visit   to   Stevenson's  Silverado,     illus.     Lamp  29: 

7-18,  Aug.,  1904. 

19 


French,  Harold.  Silverado  —  scene  of  Robert  Louis 
Stevenson's  honeymoon,  illus.  Overland  n.s.  48: 
129-37,  Sept.,  1906. 

Hamilton,  Clayton  Meeker.  On  the  trail  of  Steven- 
son. The  pictures  from  drawings  by  Walter  Hale. 
Garden  City,  Doubleday,  1915.  151  p. 

Contents.     Edinburgh.  —  The    rest    of    Scotland.  —  Eng- 
land. —  France.  —  The  rest  of  Europe.  —  The  United  States. 

Hammerton,  John  Alexander.  In  the  track  of 
R.  L.  Stevenson  and  elsewhere  in  old  France.  Bristol, 
Arrowsmith,  1907.  254  p.  illus. 

Stevenson  pilgrimage  along  the  route  of  "An  inland 

voyage."     illus.     Critic  46:  524-35.     June,    1905. 

Macdougall,  Margaret  Armour.  The  home  and 
early  haunts  of  R.  L.  Stevenson.  Edin.  White,  1895. 
49  p.  illus.  port. 

Masson,  Flora.  Scottish  homes  and  haunts  of  Robert 
Louis  Stevenson.  Living  Age  270  (7th  ser.  52): 
72-80.  July  8,  1911. 

Ross,  J.  Edgar.  Silverado  today.  illus.  Overland 
n.s.  53:  193-9.  Mar.,  1909. 

Ross,  John  A.  The  early  home  of  Stevenson,  illus. 
Good  Words  36:  181-6.  Apr.,  1895. 

Sanchez,  Nellie  Van  de  Grift.  In  California  with 
Robert  Louis  Stevenson,  illus.  port.  Scribner's 
Magazine  60:  467-81.  Oct.,  1916. 

Sharp,  William  (Fiona  Macleod,  pseud.).  The 
country  of  Stevenson,  illus.  In  his  Literary  geog- 
raphy." X.  V.  Scribner,  1904.  p.  20-36. 

Simpson,  Evelyn  Blantyre.  Robert  Louis  Stevenson's 
hills  of  home.  Living  Age  229  (7th  ser.  11): 
255-9.  Apr.  27,  1901. 

Watt,  Francis.  Robert  Louis  Stevenson  and  Edin- 
burgh, illus.  Art  Journal  48:  46-50.  Feb.,  1896. 

Tennyson 
Allen,    Grant.     Tennyson's   homes   at   Aldworth   and 

Faringford.    illus.      English  Illustrated  Magazine  10: 

145-56.     Dec.,  1892. 
Bartholomew,     John .   George.     Arthurian     regions. 

map.     In  his  Literary  and  historical  atlas  of  Europe. 

Lond.  Dent,  N.  Y.    Dutton,  [1912].     p.  132. 
Collins,  John  Churton.     Tennyson,     illus.     In  Lang, 

Andrew,  ed.     Poets'  country.     Phil.  Lippincott,  1907. 

p.  253-73. 
Hargrove,  Ethel  C.     Where  Tennyson  lived.     In  her 

Wanderings  in  the  Isle  of  Wight.    Lond.  Melrose.  1913. 

I..  159-62. 
Howitt,   William.     Alfred   Tennyson.     In  his   Homes 

and  haunts  of  the  most  eminent  British  poets.     3d  ed. 

Lond.  Routledge,  1857.     p.  691-703. 

20 


Huckel,  Oliver.  Through  England  with  Tennyson, 
a  pilgrimage  to  places  associated  with  the  great  lau- 
reate.  NTY.  Crowell,  [1913].  294  p.  illus.  ports. 

Lincolnshire  scenery  and  character  as  illustrated 
by  Mr.  Tennyson.  Macmillan's  Magazine  29:  140-4. 
Dec.,  ls73. 

[Sherwood,  John  D.J  Visits  to  the  homes  of  authors. 
The  home  of  A.  Tennyson.  Hours  at  Home  5:  116-8. 
June,  1867. 

Walters,  John  Cuming.  In  Tennyson  land;  a  brief 
account  of  the  home  and  early  surroundings  of  the 
poet  laureate  and  an  attempt  to  identify  the  scenes 
and  trace  the  influences  of  Lincolnshire  in  his  works. 
Lond.  Redway,  1890.  108  p.  illus. 

Winterwood,  Geoffrey.  In  the  laureate's  footsteps. 
illus.  Good  Words  33:  670-8,  Oct.,  1892. 

Thackeray 

Brown,  Alice.  Thackeray's  homes,  illus.  Book  Buyer 
14 :  492-5.  June  1897.  Review  of  Crowe,  Thackeray's 
haunts  and  homes. 

Chancellor,  Edwin  Beresford.  The  London  of 
Thackeray's  novels.  Living  Age  v.  284  (7th  ser.  v.  66) : 
793-7,  Mar.  27,  1915. 

Crowe,  Eyre.  Thackeray's  haunts  and  homes.  N.  Y. 
Scribner,  1897.  82  p.  illus. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  Thackeray's  London. 
Outlook  106:  140-2.  Jan.  17,  1914. 

Melville,  Lewis  (pseud,  of  Lewis  S.  Benjamin). 
The  characters  and  places  of  Thackeray's  books, 
illus.  Bookman  (London)  23:  192-200.  Feb.,  1903. 

Thackeray  and  Thackeray's  London,  illus.  Book- 
man (London)  40:  17-24.  Apr.,  1911. 

The  Thackeray  country.  Lond.  Black,  1905. 

223  p.  illus.  (The  pilgrimage  series.) 

Thackeray's  London,  illus.  port.  Century  82: 

319-28.  July,  1911. 

Mudge,  Isadore  Gilbert,  and  Sears,  M.  E.  A  Thack- 
eray dictionary:  the  characters  and  scenes  of  the 
novels  and  short  stories  alphabetically  arranged.  Lond. 
Routledge,  N.  Y.  Button,  1910.  304  p.  Synopses 
p.  xiii-xl.  Bibliography,  "List  of  authorities  cited": 
p.  xli-xlii.  Index  to  originals  of  characters  and  places: 
p.  301-4. 

Rideing,  William  Henry.  In  the  footsteps  of  Thack- 
eray, illus.  Century  26  (n.s.  4):  830-44.  Oct., 
1883. 

Thackeray  in  London.  Critic  4:  181-2,  193-4, 

Apr.,  19,  26,  1884. 

Thackeray's  London.  A  description  of  his  haunts 

and  the  scenes  of  his  novels.  Lond.  Jar  vis,  1885. 
103  p. 

21 


Sharp,  William  (Fiona  Macleod,  pseud.).  Thack- 
eray-land, illus.  In  his  Literary  geography.  X.  V. 
Scribner,  1904.  p.  87-105. 

Smith,  Francis  Hopkinson.  In  Thackeray's  London. 
Garden  City,  Doubleday,  1913.  199  p.  Illustrated 
by  the  author. 

Thackeray's  London.  Chambers'  Journal  69  (oth 
ser.  9):  641-3.  Oct.  8,  1892. 

Thackeray's  London.  Temple  Bar  105:  422-32. 
July,  1895. 

West,  Sir  Algernon.  Mayfair  and  Thackeray.  Living 
Age  248  (7th  ser.  30) :  307-14.  Feb.  3,  1906. 

Wordsworth 

Brooke,  Stop  ford  Augustus.  Dove  cottage:  Words- 
worth's home  from  1800-8,  December  21,  1799  to 
May,  1808.  Lond.  Macmillan,  1899.  75  p. 

Burroughs,  John.  In  Wordsworth's  country.  Cen- 
tury 27  (n.s.  5):  418-21.  Jan.,  1884. 

Coleridge,  Ernest  Hartley.  William  Wordsworth, 
illus.  In  Lang,  Andrew,  ed.  Poets'  country.  Phil. 
Lippincott,  1907.  p.  25-45. 

Cuyler,  Theodore  Ledyard.  The  English  lakes  and 
Wordsworth.  Godey's  Lady's  Book  28:  30-32.  Jan., 
1844. 

Haskell,  Mabel  Percy.  Paradise  of  poets,  illus. 
Delineator  66:  412-14.  Sept.,  1905. 

Higginson,  Thomas  Wentworth.  Wordsworthshire. 
Atlantic  96:  88-95.  July,  1905. 

Howitt,  William.  Scenery  of  "The  white  doe  of 
Rylston."  Tait's  Edinburgh  Magazine  6:  367-73. 
July,  1839. 

William  Wordsworth.  In  his  Homes  and  haunts  of 

the  most  eminent  British  poets.  3d  ed.  Lond.  Rout- 
ledge,  1857.  p.  532-55. 

Knight,  William  Angus.  A  literary  shrine;  Dove 
Cottage,  the  home  of  Wordsworth  and  de  Quincey. 
illus.  Century  60  (n.s.  38):  53-62.  May,  1900. 

Through  the  Wordsworth  country.  Lond.  Son- 

nenschein,  1887.  268  p.  illus. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  The  lake  country  and 
Wordsworth,  illus.  In  his  Backgrounds  of  litera- 
ture. N.  Y.  Macmillan,  1912.  p.  3-54. 

O'Hagan,  Thomas.  In  the  footsteps  of  Wordsworth- 
illus.  port.  Catholic  World  78:310-20.  Dec.,  1903- 

Olcott,  Charles  Sumner.  A  day  in  Wordsworth's 
country,  illus.  In  his  Lure  of  the  camera.  Bost. 
Houghton.  l'.»l  1.  p.  .")!  7-2. 

22  . 


Robertson,  Eric  Sutherland.     Wordsworth  and  the 

English    lake   country:    an    introduction   to   a    poet's 

country.     X.  V.  Appleton,  1911.     351  p.     illus.  map. 

Title    of    the    English    edition:        Wordsworthshire. 

"Works  chiefly  consulted:"  p.  316-7.     "Concordance 

showing  persons  and  places  belonging  to  Wordsworth- 

shire":  p.  340-48. 
Wilson,    James    Grant.     Footprints   of  Wordsworth. 

illus.     Putnam's  Magazine  3:  459-64.     Jan.,  1908. 
Yarnell,    Ellis.     Walks    and    visits    to    Wordsworth's 

country,     illus.     Lippincott  18:  543-54,  669-82.  Nov., 

Dec.,  1876. 
Wordsworth,    William.     See   also    Books   about    the 

Lake  Country  filed  under  English-General. 

AMERICAN 
General 

American  literary  shrines.  Bookman  (N.  Y.)  36: 
L>:W-40.  Nov.,  1912. 

Bacon,  Edwin  Munroe.  Literary  pilgrimages  in 
New  England  to  the  homes  of  famous  makers  of  Ameri- 
can literature,  and  among  the  haunts  and  scenes  of 
their  writings.  N.  Y.  Silver  [1902].  532  p.  illus. 
map. 

Bartholomew,  John  George.  A  gazetteer  of  towns 
and  places  in  America  having  a  literary  or  historic 
interest.  In  his  Literary  and  historical  atlas  of 
America.  Lond.  Dent.  N.  Y.  Dutton  [1911].  p.  137- 
166.  (Everyman's  library'.) 

Carruth,  Frances  Weston.  Boston  in  fiction,  illus. 
Bookman  (N.  Y.)  14:  236-54,  364-85,  507-21,  590- 
604.  Nov.,  1901-Feb.,  1902. 

1.  The  old  north  end.  —  2.  About  the  Common.  —  3. 
The  Back  Bay  district.  —  4.  Suburban  Boston. 

Fictional    rambles    in    and    about    Boston,    N.    Y. 

McClure,  1902.     380  p.     illus. 

Dell,  Floyd.  Chicago  in  fiction,  illus.  Bookman 
(N.  Y.)  38:  270-7,  375-7.  Nov.,  Dec.  1913. 

French,  Allen.  Chiefly  literary,  illus.  In  his  Old 
Concord.  Bost.  Little,  1915.  p.  79-156. 

Hemstreet,  Charles.  Literary  New  York,  its  land- 
marks and  associations.  N.  Y.  and  Lond.,  Putnam, 
1903.  271  p.  illus.  map. 

Homes  of  American  authors:  comprising  anecdotal, 
personal,  and  descriptive  sketches;  by  various  writers. 
X.  Y.  Putnam,  1853.  366  p.  illus.  ports. 

Mabie,  Hamilton  Wright.  Backgrounds  of  litera- 
ture. N.  Y.  Macmillan,  1912.  328  p.  illus. 

Contents.  The  Lake  Country  and  Wordsworth.  —  Emer- 
son and  Concord.  —  The  Washington  Irving  country.  — 
Weimar  and  Goethe.  —  The  land  of  Lorna  Doone.  —  America 
in  Whitman's  poetry.  —  The  land  of  Scott.  —  Hawthorne 
and  the  new  world. 

23 


Mallary,    Raymond    DeWitt.      Lenox    in    literature. 

illus.  port.  Critic  41 :  31-40.     July,  1902. 
Maurice,    Arthur    Bartlett.     New    York    in    fiction. 

X.  V.  Dodd,   1901.     231  p.     illus. 
Contents.     Old     and     proletarian     New     York.  —  About 

Washington  Square.  —  The  new  city  and  suburban  New  York . 

—  New  York  of  the  novelists.      N.    Y.    Dodd,    1916. 
366  p.     illus. 

Same.  Bookman  N.  Y.  42:  Sept.,  1915-Feb.,  1916. 

Olcott,  Charles  Sunnier.  The  lure  of  the  camera. 
Bost.  Houghton,  1914.  300  p.  illus.  ports. 

Contents.  The  lure  of  the  camera.  —  Literary  rambles 
in  Gt.  Britain.  —  A  day  in  Wordsworth's  country.  —  From 
Hawthornden  to  Roslin  Glen.  —  The  country  of  Mrs.  Hum- 
phry Ward.  —  A  tour  of  the  Italian  Lakes.  —  Literary  land- 
marks of  New  England.  —  A  day  with  John  Burroughs.  — 
Glimpses  of  the  Yellowstone.  —  The  Grand  Cafion  of  Arizona. 

Wilson,  Rufus  Rockwell.  New  England  in  letters. 
N.  Y.  Wessels,  1904.  384  p.  illus.  Chapter  head- 
ings do  not  indicate  the  scope  of  the  chapter. 

Contents.  Through  Longfellow's  country.  —  Wanderings 
in  Whittier  land.  —  The  Salem  of  Hawthorne.  —  Emerson 
and  others  in  Concord.  —  Cambridge  and  its  worthies.  —  A 
day  of  literary  beginnings.  —  The  autocrat  and  his  comrades. — 
The  Boston  of  a  later  time.  —  The  land  of  the  pilgrims.  — 
A  windingBay  State  journey.  —  The  Berkshires  and  beyond. — 
Connecticut  wits  and  worthies. 

Wolfe,  Theodore  Frelinghuysen.  Literary  haunts 
and  homes;  American  authors.  Phil.  Lippincott, 
1899.  227  p.  illus. 

Contents.  1.  In  oldest  New  York.  —  2.  About  and  above 
City  Hall  Park.  —  3.  The  Latin  quarter  and  its  environs.  — 
4.  Northward  to  the  Harlem  and  beyond.  —  Homes  and 
haunts  of  Poe.  —  Bryant,  Whitman,  etc.,  a  Long  Island 
ramble.  —  Cooper  shrines  and  scenes.  —  Irving's  Sunnyside 
and  Sleepy  Hollow.  —  Kipling,  Hartford  authors,  etc.,  a 
Connecticut  River  pilgrimage. 

Literary  rambles  at  home  and  abroad.     Phil,  and 

Lond.     Lippincott,   1901.     235  p.     illus. 
America,  p.  15-119. 

Literary  shrines;  the  haunts  of  some  famous  Amer- 
ican authors.  10th  ed.  Phil.  Lippincott,  1897. 
233  p.  illus.  Chapter  headings  do  not  indicate  the 
scope  of  the  chapter. 

Contents.  The  Concord  pilgrimage:  —  1.  A  village  of 
literary  shrines.  —  2.  The  Old  Manse.  —  3.  A  storied  river 
and  battlefield. —  4.  The  home  of  Emerson. —  5.  The  orchard 
house  and  its  neighbours.  —  6.  Hawthorne's  Wayside  home.  — 
7.  The  Walden  of  Thoreau. —  8.  The  hilltop  hearsed  with 
pines.  —  In  and  out  of  literary  Boston:  1.  Cambridge,  Elm- 
wood,  Mount  Auburn.  —  2.  Belmont,  the  Wayside  Inn, 
Home  of  Whittier. —  3.  Salem,  Whittier 's  oak-knoll  and  be- 
yond. —  4.  Webster's  Marshfield,  Brook  Farm.  etc.  —  In 
Berkshire  with  Hawthorne:  1.  The  Graylock  and  Hoosac 
region.  —  2.  Lenox  and  Middle  Berkshire.  —  A  day  with  the 
good  grey  poet. 

24 


Harte 

Beasley,  Thomas  Dykes.  A  tramp  through  the  Bret 
Harte  country;  with  a  foreword  by  Charles  A.  Mur- 
dock,  San  Francisco,  Elder  [1914].  96  p.  illus. 

Clemens,  William  M.  Bret  Harte's  country.  Book- 
man (X.  V.)  13:  223-37.  May,  1901. 

Doub,  R.  A.  Trip  through  the  Bret  Harte  country. 
Overland  2d  ser.  60:  234-6,  Sept.,  1912. 

Fulton,  Robert.  Glimpses  of  the  Mother  Lode,  illua. 
Bookman  (N.  Y.)  39:  49-57.  Mar.,  1914. 

Kyne,  Peter  B.  Trailing  Bret  Harte  by  motor,  illus. 
Sunset  31:  97-107.  July,  1913. 

Peixotto,  Ernest  C.  Through  Bret  Harte's  country, 
illus.  Scribner's  Magazine  34:  533-40.  Nov.,  1903. 

Hawthorne 

Alden,  William  Livingston.  Scenes  from  the  Marble 
faun,  illus.  Scribner's  Monthly  2:  493-4.  Sept., 
1871. 

Bacon,  Edwin  Munroe.  Hawthorne  at  Concord. 
In  his  Literary  pilgrimages.  N.  Y.  Silver,  1902. 
p.  402-14. 

Cable,  Lucy  Leffingwell.  Old  Salem  and  The  scarlet 
letter,  illus.  Bookman  (N.  Y.)  26:  398-403.  Dec., 
1907. 

Clarke,  Helen  Archibald.  Hawthorne's  country. 
N.  Y.  Baker,  1910.  348  p.  illus.  port. 

Contents.  Far  afield  in  New  England.  —  Historical 
miniatures.  —  Puritan  tragedies.  —  "The  artist  of  the  beauti- 
ful."—  The  Roxbury  Utopia.  —  In  wonderland. —  English 
episodes.  —  Italy  as  Hawthorne  saw  it.  —  The  elixir  of  life. 

Conway,  Moncure  Daniel.  Hawthorne  and  Brook 
Farm.  Every  Saturday  7:  13-18.  Jan.  2,  1869. 

Harris,  Amanda  Bartlett.  The  old  Manse  at  Con- 
cord. Appleton's  Journal  8:  300-301.  Sept.  14,  1872. 

Hawthorne,  Julian.  Scenes  of  Hawthorne's  romances, 
illus.  Century  28  (n.s.  6) :  380-97.  July,  1884. 

The  Salem  of  Hawthorne,    illus.     Century  28  (n.s. 

6):  3-17.     May,  1884. 

Hawthorne.  illus.  port.  In  Homes  of  American 
authors.  N.  Y.  Putnam,  1853.  p.  291-313. 

Morley,  George.  Hawthorne's  Warwickshire  haunts. 
Living  Age  225  (7th  ser.  v.  7) :  379-83.  May  12,  1900. 

Nevins,  Winfield  Scott.  The  homes  and  haunts  of 
Hawthorne,  illus.  ports.  New  England  Magazine 
n.s.  9:289-306.  Nov.,  1893. 

Olcott,  Charles  Sumner.  Hawthorne.  Salem  and 
Concord,  illus.  In  his  Lure  of  the  camera.  Bost. 
Houghton,  1914.  p.  179-206. 

Perry,  Bliss.  Hawthorne  at  North  Adams.  Atlantic 
71 :  675-82.  May,  1893. 

25 


Wilson,  Rufus  Rockwell.     Hawthorne's  Salem  haunts. 

illus.   port.      Munsey   20:   370-78.     Dec.,    l*9s. 
Wolfe,  Theodore  Frelinghuysen.     In  Berkshire  with 

Hawthorne.     In   his  Literary  shrines.     Phil.   Lippin- 

cott,  1897.     p.  153-98. 
Other  references  to  Hawthorne  throughout  the  book. 

Irving 
Bacon,    Edgar    Mayhew.     Sunnyside.     illus.     In    his 

Chronicles  of  Tarrytown  and  Sleepy  Hollow.     N.  Y. 

and  Lond.,  Putnam,  1897.     p.  66-70. 
Hemstreet,    Charles.     The    city    that    Irving    knew. 

illus.     In  his  Literary  New  York.     N.  Y.  and  Lond. 

Putnam,    1903.     p.   87-105. 
Hulbert,  H.  W.     Historic  homes;    Washington  Irving 

and  Sunnyside.     Magazine  of  American  History  12: 

153-61.     Aug.,   1884. 
Irving,     illus.     In  Homes  of  American     authors.    N.Y. 

Putnam,  1853.     p.  35-61. 
Lossing,  Benson  John.     Sunnyside,  Tarrytown.     illus. 

In     Singleton,     Esther,     ed.     Historic     buildings     of 

America.     N.  Y.  Dodd  [c!906].     p.  249-54. 
Mabie,   Hamilton  Wright.     The  Washington   Irving 

country,     illus.     In    his    Backgrounds    of  '  literature. 

X.  Y.  Macmillan,  1912.     p.  101-31. 
Mapes,    Ella    Stryker.     Where    Irving    worked    and 

wandered,     illus.     port.     Critic     41:     328-32.     Oct., 

1<  M)2. 
Miller,  Harry  Edward.     In  the  Sleepy  Hollow  country. 

illus.     ports.     New  England  Magazine  n.s.  23:  449- 

69.     Dec.,    1900. 
Rainey,   Ada.     The  city  home  of  Washington  Irving. 

illu*.     House  Beautiful  35:  30-31.     Dec.,  1913. 
Rockwood,  George  G.     The  classic  grounds  of  Ameri- 
can   authors.     Irving.     [With    explanatory    text    by 

Edward  Guilbert.]     N.  Y.  1864.     81.     illus. 
Visit  to  Sunnyside.      Leisure    Hour    14:    103-6.    Feb. 

IS.      iMi.-i. 

Williams,  Lawrence.  The  ghost  in  Irving  Place. 
illus.  port.  Bookman  (N.  Y.)  30:  53-5.  Sept., 
1909. 

Wolfe,  Theodore  Frelinghuysen.  Irving's  Sunny- 
side  ami  Sleepy  Hollow.  In  his  Literary  haunts  ami 
homes.  American  authors.  Phil.  Lippincott.  IVMi. 
p.  171  192. 

Longfellow 

American  homes.  No.  1.  The  residence  of  H. 
W.  Longfellow,  Cambridge,  Massachusetts,  illus. 
Art  Journal  32:  r,\  :>.  Feb.,  ISM>. 

Bacon,  Edwin  Munroe.  Wayside  Inn  at  Sudbury. 
illus.  In  his  Literary  pilgrimages.  N.  Y.  Silver. 
I'.MIL'.  P.  :i»ii'  7(). 

26 


Bangs,  Ella  Matthews.  An  historic  mansion.  The 
Wadsworth-Longfellow  house  at  Portland,  Me. 
illus  port.  New  England  Magazine  n.s.  27:  695- 
713.  Fel>..  1!»03. 

Cammett,  Stephen.  Early  homes  of  Longfellow. 
illus.  Century  73  (n.s.  51):  647-57.  Mar.,  1907. 

Longfellow's  town.  Portland,  Me.  illus.  Put- 
nam's Magazine  1:  648-57.  Mar.,  1907. 

Clarke,  Helen  Archibald.  Longfellow's  country. 
N.  V.  Baker,  1909.  252  p.  illus.  port. 

Contents.  Along  the  coast  of  New  England.  —  Under 
the  shadow  of  Blomidon.  —  Idylls  from  history.  —  The  New 
England  Tragedus.  —  The  lore  of  "Hiawatha."  —  In  Cam- 
bridge. 

Earl,  Fanny  Kennish.  Longfellow's  early  home 
i  Portland),  illu-.  Midland  Magazine  9:  402-8. 
May.  ls«is. 

Edwards,  George  Thornton.  The  youthful  haunts 
of  Longfellow.  Portland,  Me.  Edwards,  1907.  205 
p.  illus.  ports. 

Goold,  Nathan.  The  Wadsworth-Longfellow  house, 
Portland,  illus.  In  Singleton,  Esther,  ed.  His- 
toric buildings  of  America.  N.  Y.  Dodd  [c!906],  p. 
199-204. 

The  home  of  Longfellow,  illus.  Appleton's  Journal 
2:  577-81,  Dec.  18,  1869. 

Howard,  Honora  S.  The  Longfellow  homestead. 
Canadian  Magazine  3:  389-90.  Aug.,  1894. 

Longfellow,  illus.  In  Homes  of  American  authors. 
N.  V.  Putnam,  1853.  p.  265-87. 

Macleod,  Campbell.  Evangeline's  town,  where  the 
Acadian  lovers  met;  the  true  story  of  Longfellow's 
poetical  romance.  Craftsman  13:  534-7.  Feb.,  1908. 

Mapes,  Ella  Stryker.  The  Wayside  Inn  today,  illus. 
Lamp  27:  2s- 32.  Aug.,  1903. 

Mayer,  Mary  Josephine.  The  land  of  Evangeline.  il- 
lus. Critic  41:  108-11.  Aug.,  1902. 

Porter,  Noah.  Evangeline;  the  place,  the  stcry,  and 
the  poem.  X.  V.  Cassell  [c!882].  32  p.  illus. 

Titherington,  Richard  Handfield.  Longfellow's 
places  and  people,  illus.  Munsey  9:  259-64.  June, 
1893. 

Poe 

Dugdale,   Jennie   Bard.     The  grave  of  Edgar  Allan 

Poe.     Poet  Lore  11:  583-8.     Autumn  no.  1899. 
Graves,    Charles    Marshall.     Landmarks   of    Poe    in 

Richmond,     illus.     ports.    Century  67:  909-20.    Apr., 

I'.HM. 
Lamb,  M.  J.     The  house  of  Poe  at  Fordham.      illus. 

Appleton's  Journal  12:  75-7.     July  18,  1874. 
McCabe,  Lida  Rose.     A  pilgrimage  to  Poe's  cottage. 

illus.     Book  Buyer  25:  592-8.     Jan.,  1903. 

27 


Stedman,  Edmund  Clarence.  Poe's  cottage  at 
Fordham.  illus.  Century  73  (n.s.  51) :  770-73.  Mar., 
1907. 

Visit  to  Poe's  grave.  Outlook  So:  ^:;7  8.  Apr.  13, 
1907. 

Whitty,  J.  H.  Edgar  Allan  Poe  in  England  and  Scot- 
land, illus.  Bookman,  N.  V.  44:  14-21.  Sept., 
1916. 

Wolfe,  Theodore  Frelinghuysen.  Homes  and 
haunts  of  Poe.  In  his  Literary  haunts  and  homes: 
American  authors.  Phil.  Lippincott,  1899.  p.  12s. 

Whittier 
Bacon,  Edwin  Munroe.     In  Whittier's  country,    illus. 

port.     In    his    Literary    pilgrimages.     N.    V.    Silver, 

1902.     p.  35  64. 
Forten,  C.  L.     Visit  to  the  birthplace  of  J.  G.  Whittier. 

Scribner's  Monthly  4:  5X1-3.     Sept.,  1S72. 
Griffith,    George    Bancroft.     Birthplace    and    home 

of   Whittier.     Potter's   American    Monthly    14:    258- 

61.     Apr.,  1880. 

Hoyt,  Martin  W.  Rambles  in  Whittier  land.  Man- 
chester, N.  H.  Granite  state  Pub.  co.,  1912.  45  p. 

illus.      ports. 
Kennedy,  William  Sloane.     In  Whittier's  land,     illus. 

ports.     New  England  Magazine  n.s.  7:  275-93.     Xov., 

1892. 
Maulsby,    David    Lee.     Whittier's    \Y\\-    Hampshire. 

illus.     Xew  England  Magazine  n.s.  22:  (iol-47.     Aug., 

1900. 
Penfield,    Roderic   C.       In   Whittier's  country,     illus. 

Harper's  Weekly  45:  7<>7.     Aug.,    K>.    I'.KM. 
Pickard,    Samuel  Thomas.     Whittier   land,   a  hand- 
book of    North  Essex,  containing  main-  anecdotes  of 

and  poems  by  John  Greenleaf  Whittier  never  before 

collected.     Bost.      Houghton,      1904.      160     p.     illus. 

map. 
Tyler,  J.   G.     Whittier's  birthplace:     Haverhill,   Mass. 

Magazine  of    American    History  29:    50-51.       Jan., 

1893. 
Wood,  Ruth  Kedzie.     A  now  pilgrim  in  Whittierland. 

illus.      Bookman  (X.  V.)   38:  -1M  -'.».      Jan..   1914. 


2S 


Gaylord 

Maker 
Syracuse. 

PAI.  JAN.  21. 


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